The International Campaign for Real History
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THOUGH not an expert on the subject-matter of David Irving‘s Hitler’s War, investigated by Gitta Sereny and Lewis Chester (page 17, last week), I should like to draw attention to a document which seems to me to suggest very strongly indeed that Hitler knew of the plans for the systematic extermination of the Jews right from their inception. On November 25, 1941, some five weeks before the Wannsee conference that decided on the ” Final Solution,” Hitler gave an audience in Berlin to the exiled Mufti of Jerusalem, Haj Amin al-Husseini. In the course of their talk the Mufti tried unsuccessfully to elicit a comprehensive statement of German sympathy for Arab nationalist aims in the Middle East. After giving his reasons for not making such a statement immediately (mainly that it would upset relations with Vichy France) Hitler, according to the official German Foreign Office record of the interview, told Haj Amin, “enjoining him to lock it in the uttermost depths of his heart” that:
Would Mr Irving seriously maintain that by “destruction” Hitler merely meant deportation? J S F Parker Department of History, |